'IPL has done good to Indian players'

Asked if would he still give a chance to Tendulkar, who has been struggling for form of late, Cairns said, "Even if he is operating below his benchmark, he is still better than anybody else."

"Tendulkar has to be in the team out of respect and contributions he made in his long career, even though he has not been scoring lots of runs," Cairns said.

Cairns said the Indian Premier League has done a lot of good to Indian players and in next five to 10 years the world will see India producing players of international quality.

"There may be some criticising IPL but it has done good to Indian players. A lot of players have been interacting with international players, trainers and coaches, which has helped them improve their cricket. And they have been learning faster and in professional way which is good for the game," he said.

"However, the next frontier for India is to consistently win abroad," he said.

"It's all about mental prowess than technique to play on bouncier tracks abroad. Rahul Dravid, (Virender) Sehwag and Tendulkar had good records abroad. They played well because they had the mental prowess to play in alien conditions," he said.

Right fast bowling combination

Cairns, however, said that India should get their fast bowling department right if they want to be successful abroad.

"Until India finds the fast bowling combination it will struggle. It needs to find that and that's one thing I think that Indian cricket yearns for," he said.

"You cannot have one fast bowler doing all the work. You need a combination of two bowlers. England has Jimmy Anderson and Chris Broad. South Africa has Dale Steyn and Mornie Morkel. The world's dominating teams are those who had a combination of two good fast bowlers. Even Pakistan had Waqar Younis and Wasim Akram," he added.

"Ishant is somewhere about and it is the consistency. If you had Zaheer Khan and Javagal Srinath bowling together I guarantee that India would have been winning abroad," Cairns said.